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re are some who feel that the conditions are such that they can attack us there. My answer is, Bring39。 requirement that only charges based on reasonable and reliable evidence be allowed. _____74 After all, it39。 it is quite another thing to do nothing, especially if doing nothing is just a way of securing support from certain industries that worsen the problem. There are, after all, things that can he done. Reopening a serious international dialogue, and not just saying a few good words, would be a useful if inadequate start. Not every problem must be solving before the weight of evidence bees so pelling that certain initial steps bee almost mandatory. We already know how to make more fuelefficient yet no national policy has surfaced to acplish this. The scientific and engineering munities are the ones best suited to identify the scientific research that is still needed and the technical projects that show the greatest promise. These issues should be decided by them and not the politicians. Once solutions look promising, as a few already do, industry will be all too ready to romp in, for at that stage there is money to be made. And only a fool would underestimate human ingenuity when given a proper incentive, or the strength of American industry once the boiler is lit under it. 60. What can be inferred about the Kyoto Protocol from Paragraph 1? A. It was about environment protection. B. It was supported by most Democrats. C. It was considered awkward by conservations D. It was officially rejected by most US senators. 61. Many studies suggest that full agreement with the Kyoto Protocol would run the risk of _____. A. falling victim to military warfare B. offending other countries C. reexperiencing the past miseries D. provoking nationwide anger 62. We can learn from Paragraph 2 that _____. A. measures should be taken to deal with global warming. B. the best way to deal with global warming is `let it be39。s success seemed too good to be true, and it was. In only four years as a physicist at Bell Laborites, Schon, 32, had coauthored 90 scientific papersone every 16 daysdealing new discoveries in superconductivity, lasers, nanotechnology and quantum physics. This output astonished his colleagues, and made them suspicious. When one coworker noticed that the same table of data appeared in two separate paperswhich also happened to appear in the two most prestigious scientific journals in the world, Science and Naturethe jig was up. In October 2022 a Bell Labs investigation found that: Schon had falsified and fabricated data. His career as a scientist was finished .Scientific scandals, witch are as old as science itself, tend to follow similar patterns of presumption and due reward. In recent years, of course, the pressure on scientists to publish in the top journals has increased, making the journals much more crucial to career success. The questions are whether Nature and Science have bee to too powerful as arbiters of what science reach to the public, and whether the journals are up to their task as gatekeepers. Each scientific specialty has its own set of journals. Physicists have Physical Review Letters。s success, it can be a bewildering, painful experience. So it is no wonder some parents find themselves hoping that ambition can be taught like any other subject at school. It39。t matter where charities get their money from: what ______much is what they do with it. A. taunts for B. asks for C. consists of D. approves of l8. Any business needs ordinary insurance______ risks such as fire, flood and breakage. A. in B. against C. raft D. of 19. As he was a thoroughly professional journalist, he already knew the media______. A. to and fro B. upside and down C. inside and out D. now and then 20. There was little, if any, evidence to substantiate the gossip and, ______, there was little to disprove it. PART II CLOZE TEST (15 minutes, 15 points) There is a closer relationship between morals and architecture and interior decoration______21, we suspect. Huxley has pointed out that Western ladies did not take frequent baths ______22 they were afraid to see their own naked bodies, and this moral concept delayed the______23 of the modern whiteenameled bathtub for centuries. One can understand, ______24 in the design of old Chinese furniture there was so little consideration for human______ 25 only when we realize the Confucian atmosphere in which people moved about. Chinese redwood Furniture was designed for people to sit______26 in, because that was the only posture approved by society. Even Chinese emperors had to sit on a (n) ______27 on which I would not think of______28 for more than five minutes, and for that matter the English kings were just as badly off. Cleopatra went about______29 on a couch carried by servants, because______30 she had never heard of Confucius. If Confucius should have seen her doing that, he would certainly have struck her shins with a stick, as he did______31 one of his old disciples, Yuan Jiang, when the latter was found sitting in an______32 posture. In the Confucian society in which we lived, gentlemen and ladies had to______33 themselves perfectly erect, at least on formal______34 , and any sign of putting one39。s marketing strategies. A. integral B. instinctive C. intangible D. ingenious l6. They speak of election campaign polls as a musician might of an orchestra ______, or a painter of defective paint. A. in pace B. out of focus C. in step D. out of tune 17. Surely it doesn39。 but more than 1,400 people attended the fourday gathering. We are pleased that the Summit II was able to attract a record number of grassroots activists, academicians, students, researchers, government officials We proved to the world that our pl